Monday, November 28, 2022

"Circus" COPS and Civil Society "Clowns"

Today Terry Slavin at reuters.com quoted Sandrine Dixson-Declève, co-president of The Club of Rome, "I fear that COPs are becoming little more than a circus, with the petrostates as the ringmasters and us – civil society, progressive business and financial institutions, heads of state and negotiators from countries wanting climate action – are the clowns. We smile manically as incremental promises and weak pledges are presented as progress."

Slavin's article continued, "She and others are calling for fundamental reform of the COP process, something that could well be on the agenda at COP28 next year in Dubai, when the first-ever Global Stocktake of progress on climate action since the Paris Agreement was signed in 2015 will be published."

Wednesday, November 23, 2022

Man Denies Eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD

Destruction of Pompeii and Herculaneum
The Destruction of Pompeii and Herculaneum (c. 1821) by John Martin
John Martin, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

This poem satirically responds to elected officials who believe the climate crisis is a hoax, even with the ultraconservative IPCC’s 2019 dire warnings. I recall Jonathan Swift cared deeply about starvation in Ireland in 1729 so he wrote “A Modest Proposal” suggesting Irish babies be raised for meat and gloves as a way to draw attention from wealthy London investors.

Man Denies Eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD

 

It never happened. It was fake news.

Bodies in Pompeii were plaster casts.

There was no molten lava, pumice, ash.

 

What scientists and researchers call

unequivocal evidence

is just a matter of liberal opinion.

 

Don’t tell me about

Pliny the Younger as he also thought

there was a man named Jesus.

 

I mean how likely is it

a fire-raining volcano would

surprise so many

 

talking in gardens, eating lunch,
wondering what the day would bring?

Monday, November 21, 2022

Good COP, Bad COP

COP27 gave new meaning to "Good cop, bad cop."

To use a football metaphor, imagine a fullback dropping the ball 27 consecutive games. Maybe it's time to get a new fullback.

In this case, that means two separate COPs each year, one with fossil fuel interests, and one without. Global media, governments, and citizens could decide which COP to focus on.

For example, Sam Meredith reported at cnbc.com November 17, 2022, "Analysis from campaign groups published earlier this week showed more than 600 fossil fuel industry delegates were registered to attend COP27, reflecting an increase of over 25% from last year." I posted September 23, 2022, in "What I Think of COP1 through COP26," below a "car-crushed frog," "It was widely-reported Big Oil had the 'largest delegation' at COP26 strange as hanging their logos on Chartres Cathedral."

Now, many are reporting on the "climate fund breakthrough" noted in Valerie Volcovici, Dominic Evans, and William James' November 20, 2022, reuters.com article, "COP27 delivers climate fund breakthrough at cost of progress on emissions," but other writers, it seemed, lacked the courage and/or knowledge to report what these writers did, "Another section of the COP27 deal dropped the idea of annual target renewal in favour of returning to a longer five-year cycle set out in the Paris pact." This delay is insane given the fast rate of change, hence my suggestion for two COPS each year. 

The reuters.com writers also quoted "a visibly frustrated Alok Sharma, architect of the Glasgow [COP26] deal," regarding COP27, "Emissions peaking before 2025 as the science tells us is necessary? Not in this text. Clear follow-through on the phase down of coal? Not in this text. A clear commitment to phase out all fossil fuels? Not in this text."

Echoing Sharma's frustration, Bill McGuire wrote in The Guardian yesterday, "The big takeaway from Cop27? These climate conferences just aren’t working," "Some old hands have labelled it the worst COP ever, and I doubt many would argue." McGuire added, "Cop is no longer fit for purpose. The whole apparatus is simply too moribund to come up with any measures effective enough, and with sufficient clout, to bring about the changes needed to avoid climate chaos."

I recall after 9/11 when "members of the Hollywood entertainment industry were invited by the Pentagon 'to brainstorm [ . . . .] solutions to those threats,'" according to Michael C. Frank's article in Amerikastudien / American Studies Vol. 60, No. 4, Chance, Risk, Security: Approaches to Uncertainty in American Literature (2015), pp. 485-504. The abstract is here. This focus on creative input is a good precedent for inventing a new COP plan. Many politicians will be reluctant to ban their Big Oil funders from COPs as I suggested, or as McGuire noted, to implement something "less cumbersome and more manageable – something leaner and meaner that zeros in on the most critical aspects of the climate crisis, that does its work largely hidden from the glare of the media, and which presents a less obvious honey pot to the busy bees of the fossil fuel sector. One way forward, then, could be to establish a number of smaller bodies, each addressing one of the key issues – notably energy, agriculture, deforestation, transport, loss and damage, and perhaps others."

COP27 made it obvious the design of this process has to significantly change.

Politicians and Big Oil executives have children too, and may eventually see the shared responsibility to protect all children in every country. Unfortunately, the global community, especially in the global south, can't wait another 10 years or longer.

Friday, November 11, 2022

Thinking About Climate Catastrophe and Peter Iredale Shipwreck Near Astoria, Oregon October 25, 1906

Peter Iredale Black and White (7057124727)
Charles Knowles from Meridian Idaho, USA, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Thinking About Climate Catastrophe
and Peter Iredale Shipwreck Near Astoria,
Oregon October 25, 1906


London’s Board of Trade noted December 24, 1906
“an exceedingly heavy west north-west squall struck the vessel”
overpowering captain and crew,
forever grounding the 285 foot steel barque
on shore of Clatsop Beach
“in a thick mist” and tidal pull of Columbia River.
Photos showed the vessel was glorious
with tangled sails and three snapped masts.

Later, according to June 7, 1960 Enterprise-Courier,
“Clatsop county residents [protecting the wreck
from a possible salvager] established machine gun nests [ . . . .]
for armed conflict” if necessary
but over the years tide, rust, storm tore her apart
leaving an iron skeleton on the beach.
Oregon photographer Danielle Denham posted images
from 1900 to 2020 showing the decay
.

Escaping Nakia Creek Fire in October 2022,
hiking by Iredale with my dogs
makes me dream a beach of ghost ships
as far as the eye can see
scattered like fire-bombed houses,
names of countries on their bows.

Regarding the COP process, Climate Adam, Doctor in climate science from Oxford, did a great job of showing "what these negotiations look like up close and personal" when he attended COP24 2018 in Poland. He said, "I came back from the Conference feeling more angry, and more upset, about climate change than I think I felt in my entire life."

See Gabrielle Schwarz's "‘It was like an apocalyptic movie’: 20 climate photographs that changed the world" in The Guardian November 5, 2022.  

If you're disgusted with the COP process and climate images, check out Clive Hamilton's article in The Guardian September 6, 2022, "I’ve had a long battle with climate despair. Now I’m leaving the ‘denial machine’ to their demons," similar to my post about 50-year activist Joanna Macy. 

I'm grateful my poem "The Hunger" was included in the new anthology River Poems by Penguin Random House along with work by RALPH WALDO EMERSON, HENRY DAVID THOREAU, PABLO NERUDA, TED HUGHES, DAVID WAGONER, CHARLES WRIGHT, WANG WEI, EDGAR ALLAN POE, WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS, ROBERT FROST, WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS, WILLIAM STAFFORD, DIANE WAKOSKI, KAY RYAN, GARY SNYDER, NATASHA TRETHEWEY, RAYMOND CARVER, WALT WHITMAN, RUDYARD KIPLING, T.S. ELIOT, W.H. AUDEN, HAYDEN CARRUTH, JAMES DICKEY, SHUNTARO TANIKAWA, WENDELL BERRY, LOUISE GLÜCK, LOUISE ERDRICH, ALICE OSWALD, EMILY ROSKO,   From The Epic of Gilgamesh, WILLIAM BLAKE, JÓNAS HALLGRÍMSSON, WILFRED OWEN, RABINDRANATH TAGORE, OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN II, CONSTANCE URDANG, STEVIE SMITH, JAMES WRIGHT, CITTADHAR HṚDAYA, WILLIAM MEREDITH, CHARLES BUKOWSKI, TSITSI ELLA JAJI,  JAMES GALVIN, JORGE HUMBERTO CHÁVEZ, TRACY SMITH, TODD DAVIS, LAOZI, DU FU, KOBAYASHI ISSA, UEJIMA ONITSURA, WILLIAM WORDSWORTH, OSCAR WILDE, MARCEL PROUST, GUILLAUME APOLLINAIRE, WALLACE STEVENS,  LANGSTON HUGHES, BUDDHĀDASA BHIKKHU, SYLVIA PLATH, ROBERT BLY, GRACE PALEY, EAVAN BOLAND, MARY OLIVER,  SAM HAMILL, TCHICAYA U TAM’SI, PAULA BOHINCE, ZHANG RUOXU, MATSUO BASHO, EMILY DICKINSON, WILLIAM GIBSON, ALICE MEYNELL, VALERY BRYUSOV, HART CRANE, CARL SANDBURG, MARINA TSVETAEVA, ROBINSON JEFFERS, RUTH PITTER , EUGENIO MONTALE, THEODORE ROETHKE, DAVID BOTTOMS, JOHN SIBLEY WILLIAMS, and BRUCE BOND.

I'm also grateful I was invited to teach an ecopoetry workshop my fourth year at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Masters of Advanced Studies Program in Climate Science and Policy. Here is a post about a workshop there in 2019.